
The second studio album by early and historically important French progressive rock band. This album suffers somewhat from the dreaded "sophomore slump". Triangle branch away a little from the progressive elements found on their debut & begin incorporating a more mainstream approach into their sound.
Debut by early and historically important French progressive rock band.
A Parisian combo Triangle were founded in mid 1967 originally as a trio by Gérard "Papillon" Fournier (bass, voices), Pierre Fanen (guitars), and Jean-Pierre Prévotat (drums). In 1968 Alain Renaud replaced Pierre as a guitarist and vocalist, and in 1969 they released the debut single, that could not get any success. Alain in despair has left the combo and François Jeanneau (keyboards, saxophone) and Paul Farges (guitar) joined soon. In the following year they published the second single titled "Elégie À Gabrielle" (named after the suicide of Gabrielle Russier, a high school teacher falling in love with one of her students), and via a French label Pathé their debut eponymous album, featuring a smash hit "Peut-Être Demain".
Camarillo Blues Triangle is a loud experimental improvisational cinematic psychedelic hard post rocking breakbeat organic synthesized hallucination band from Los Angeles, California.
Combining rock guitar, bass and dark synths, Camarillo Blues Triangle forges a spectrum of blues, rock and world music to express social outrage and their sometimes troubled ramifications: violence, urban strife, drugs and paranoia. Cyrus Melchor and Alfred Di Maio combine their tragic humor and serene hostility to channel the moods and life cycles of people in the early 21st Century. Mixed in 6-channel surround, this DVD-audio release invigorates the musically enriched.